"Wl I" U' "l'l'Jl,VlyVTVJT " V 1 I- t. v . I MAY 1, 1908 The Commoner. forms service in has been condemned by Ills chief clerk and ordered off the run, yet it continues to creak and groan its way over the rails, a constant menace to his life. Should either of the above cars go into a wreck and any one of their occupants be killed, is it unjust, in the light of the experience of the strong Southern railway car, to call the management of the negligent roads guilty of manslaughter? The time is near when the man in charge of corporate action is to be held crim inally responsible for negligence by what too long has been considered an inanimate nothing impossible of any except financial punishment. Hallway Post Office. SURELY THIS IS DIVISION Certainly there is division in the republican party when a republican newspaper is bold enough to attack Andrew Carnegie. In a recent issue the Chicago Inter Ocean (rep.) print ed an editorial entitled "Can this Really be Andrew Carnegie?" The Inter Ocean editorial follows: One shock after another! A news paper telegram comes from Los An geles, the capital of the incomparable, sun belt of glorious California, where the thinking of righteous thoughts requires little or no effort. Before touching upon the writer of the mag azine article, it tells us that the Hon. Paul Morton, formerly vice president in charge of traffic of the Santa Fe railway, later secretary of the United States navy, and now president of the Equitable Life Assurance society, a recognized expert on all matters pertaining to the .rebate, is there, and, of course, talking. ''You knew," he was asked, "that rebates were given by the Santa Fe railroad system when you were its first vice president?" and, it seems, he replied: " ""The rebate proposition was built up as a matter of competition. Mr. Carnegie, who poses as a philanthro pist, is one of the greatest rebate enthusiasts the country has ever known. Every one who knows about the steel industry knows that." This is by all odds the worst blow we have received for some ti-ae. It seems incredible that the Hon. Paul Morton is speaking the truth. And yet, if anybody knows, he knows, when it comes to rebates and rebat ers. But to realize it is the difficult, almost impossible, thing! Can this be the Andrew Carnegie who is telling us in the magazines, over his own honored signature, that the railway management of this country for many years past has been Inexcusably immoral? Can this be tho Andrew Carnegie who has been telling us in the mag azines that Mr. Roosevelt is right in tearing up the whole country to end the vicious practices of the rail ways? Can this be the Andrew Carnegie who, by a slight extension of the av erage imagination, may be seen to blush with shame . as duty to his adopted couniy compels him to pen magazine articles dealing with the pernicious methods of the railway magnates? Can this be the Andrew Carnegie who, after chilling us with fear, warms us with faith by explaining that the residuum of national virtue of which he himself is the foremost representative is still a potent factor among those influences which make for good, and that the country may yet be saved by the exalted thought? Is this the Andrew Carnegie who endeavors to instill into our minds the highest and most enduring pre cepts of commercial integrity from month to month, next to pure read ing matter, in the ten and even the fifteen cent periodicals? Is this the Andrew Carnegie who declares that the thing for all of us to do in these trying hours is to be 15 just and fear not, to be virtuous if we should be happy? We are afraid that it is the same, and none other, and that the picture that presents itself to our troubled consciousness is as black as it seems; for if anybody knows about those things that tho Hon. Paul Morton is talking about, and apparently can not refrain from talking about, that man is the Hon. Paul Morton. Chi cago Inter Ocean. BOOKS RECEIVED Mysterious Psychic Forces. An account of the author's investiga tions in psychical research,, together witn tnose of other Europe: sav ants. By Camille Flammarion. Small, Maynard & Co., Boston, Mass. Price $2.50 net. Character Portraits from Dickens. Selected and arranged by Charles Welsh. Small, Maynard & Co., Bos ton, Mass. The Hanging of the Crane, (Holi day edition.) By Henry Wads worth Longfellow. Illustrated in color from paintings by Arthur I. Keller. Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 4 Park street, Joston, Mass. Price $2.00. The True Patrick Henry. By George Morgan. With twenty-four illustrations. J. B. Lipplncott Com pany, Philadelphia and London. The .farmer's Boy. (Profusely illustrated from photographs taken by the author.) By Clifton Joh on. Price $1.50 net; postage 15 cents additional. Thomas Y. Crowell & Co., New York. The Pure Gold of Nineteenth Cen tury Literature. By William Lyon Phelps, professor of English in Yale University. Cloth, 75 cents; limp leather, $1.50, net. Postage 8 cents extra. Thomas Y. Crowell & Co., New York. The Japanese Nation in Evolution. Steps in tho progress of a great peo ple. By William Elliot Griffls, D. D., L. H. D. Formerly of the Imperial University of Japan. Thomas Y. Crowell & Co., publishers, New York, Price $1.25 net; postage 10 cents extra. The Country School. By Clifton Johnson, with illustrations by the author. Thomas Y. Crowell & Co., Publishers, New York. Price $1.50, net. Postage 15 cents extra. Railway Corporations as Public Servants. By Henry S. Haines The Macmillan Company, 66 Fifth Ave., New York, Publishers. Price $1.50. Crime and Criminals, an address to the prisoners in the Chicago county jail. By Clarence S. Darrow. Charles H. Kerr & Co., Chicago. (Pam phlet.) Public Ownership and the Tele phone in Great Britain. Restriction of the industry by the state and the municipalities. By Hugo Richard Meyer, sometime assistant professor of political economy in the University of Chicago. The Macmillan Com pany, New York. Price $1.50, net. Freedom of the Press, (Booklet) by Wilmer Atkinson. Wilmer At kinson Co., Philadelphia, Pa. Tho Life of Nathan Smith Davis, A. M., M. D., L. L. D. By I. N. Danforth, A. M M. D., Chicago, 111. Cleveland Press, Chicago, 111. Favorite Fairy Tales. The child hood choice of representative men and women. Illustrated by Peter Newell. Harper Brothers, Publish ers. New York and London. Price $3.00, net. Gunhild. A Norwegian-American Episode. By Dorothy Canfleld. Henry Holt & Co., New York. A Friendly Chat and Plain Talk about Mind Reading. (Pamphlet.) Page A. Cochran, Publisher, Essex Junction, Vt. Price 50 cents. Boy Lover and Other Essays. By. Alice B. Stockham, M. D., Stockham Pub. Co., Chicago, 111., 70 Dearborn St. Price 25 cents. Play its Value and Fifty Games. By Nina B. Larrikin. TTnnrnnVTJn kcr Co., Publishers, 42, 42nd Place, wiicago, in. iTice 60 cents. Ernest Howard Crosby. A valua V? &nd a tribute. By Leonard D. Abbott. The Ariel Press, Westwood, Mass. Price, paper, 25 cents. Cloth 50 cents. The Exaltation of tho Flag. Pro ceedings at the patriotic mass meet ing held by tho Americans of tho Philippine Islands, which took place in tho city of Manila, P. I., on tho evening of Friday, August 23, 1907. Edited by Rupert B. Weatcott, pub lished by John R. Edgar & Co., Ma nila, P. I. A Rose of tho Old Regime, and other poems of homo-love and child hood. By tho Bontztown Bard (Fol ger McKinsey). Doxoy Book Shop Co., Baltimore and London. Optoraistlc Lifo, or in tho Cheering Lifo Business, by Orlaon Swett Mar don, editor of Success Magazine. Price $1.25 not, postage 15 cents ad ditional. Thomas Y. Crowoll & Co., Now York. When Pain Follows Physic, the Physic is Wrong Pain is always a symptom of iniurv. Griping means that tho physic is harsh that it Irritates. You injure the bowels when you seek to help them in that way. The bowel lining liko the skin bo comes calloused if you constantly irritate it. The hardened lining retards the natural functions. Then you have a chronic condition calling for constantphystc. And the calloused bowels demand a heavier dose. Such physic is wrong. It is wicked. It destroys the very functions that you seek to aid. You cause what you seek to cure. One Should never take any laxative save Cascareta. They aro gentle and natural. They never irritate the bowels, never gripe. Every effect is curative. They are as harmless as they are palatable. One tablet is enough unless the bowels arc calloused. Tho doso never needs increasing. Take them hist m job need them to insure one free move ment daily. Cfwcarets are casdy tablets. They are soM by all drurrkU, bat sever la bulk. Be sure te ret tbe Keaulae. with CCC on every tablet The box is Barked like this: &)caicts The vest-pocket box fi 19 cents. Tho month-treatment box 50 cents. 12,000.000 boxes sold annually. m .'..! ' y . Invest In Farm Land The Safest and Most Profitable of all Investments FOR SALE A number of one-quarter, one half and whole sections of farm land In Perkins - . county, Nebraska. Prico $8 to $13.50 por aero. This land is all rich prairie laud, every acre of which can bo cultivated. The soil is black loam and very productive. The country is healthful, the land beautiful, and suited to diversified farming. There are well improved farms, good neigh bors, good schools, good churches, and a geod town all in sight of this land. This land is located from one to five miles from Madrid, Nobr., a thriving town on the Burling ton railroad. There are three other good towns In Perkins county. 45 BUSHELS OP CORN PER ACRE WAS RAISED LAST TEAR ON LAND ADJOINING THIS LAND. 50 BUSHELS OP WHEAT PER ACRB RAISED ON THE SAME KIND OP LAND IN THE SAME COUNTY IN 1907. ALFALFA GROWS IN PROFUSION NHAR BY ON THE SAME KIND OF' LAND. For each year during the past three years the crops raised on land in Perkins couaty gold for more than the COST PRICE of the same land. Farm this land one year and Its present selling price would be doubled. It is as productive as the best land in Iowa or Illinois. Sell 20 acres In those states and your money will buy a quarter section of the land I am offering for Bale. Excellent water at a depth of 40 feet No better country on earth for raising all kinds of stock. Do you want a farm while this lan( Is within your reach? Cheap farm lands will soon be a thing of the past. I am offering this land for less than one-fourth what the same kind of soil is selling for 50 miles distant I can verify every statement made above. If interested call on me or write for prices and detail descriptions. As an investment or for a home it will pay yoa to investigate. Co-operation with other agents solicited. Audress I T. S. ALL LINCOLN, NEB. Emm 1 tI y Room 305, Fraternity Bldg.. ?. . f) r ;. V . ..'.a i i; , i f IW 1 n 1 i k 7 f f . .,